Urban Outfitters, with its faux blood-stained Kent State sweat shirt, has plenty of company in the retail world

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September 16, 2014 5:40PM (UTC)

At this point, Urban Outfitters' business strategy is trolling us: making headlines for a "vintage"-faux blood-stained Kent State sweat shirt that is clearly making light of the Kent State massacre. After getting a ton of bad P.R., the retailer issued a statement apologizing (was it worth it? We won't know until next quarter ...) but this shirt is just one of many poor fashion decisions that retailers have used to boost sales. Here's a sampling of the worst the Internet has to offer:

Actress Sophia Bush described the "Eat Less" slogan on this women's T-shirt like this: "It’s like handing a suicidal person a loaded gun. You should know better." She boycotted the store and launched a campaign against the shirt, which Urban Outfitters eventually pulled from its site.

Gap's "Manifest Destiny" T-shirt

I mean .. this is more or less a "white pride" T-shirt ...

Zara's Star of David T-shirt

How could Zara fail to realize that this shirt resembles the insignia that Nazis made Jews wear in World War II? (As a side note, Urban Outfitters has of course also produced its own Star of David shirts).

Unlike most of the other shirts on this list, you can still buy these, and the creators are oddly proud of how offensive they are:

American Apparel's "Teenagers Do It Better" shirt

Teenagers have sex, and it can be totally healthy, good, safe sex, but this American Apparel tee from the Dov Charney era is frankly borderline pedophilic and rapey.

Abercrombie and Fitch's racist Asian shirts

"Two Wongs Can Make It White," ugh.

And their sexist shirts

Abercrombie, a company that has prided itself on controversy and faux-exclusivity, has also pushed come sexists shirts. Here's one of a sampling of many:

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This shirt

Equal-opportunity racism in neat, pretty typeface.

"Keep Calm and Rape Off" by Solid Gold Bomb

This shirt, sold briefly on Amazon by third-party vendor Solid Gold Bomb, appeared alongside shirts of the "Keep Calm..." meme, including the charming "Keep Calm and Knife Her" and "Keep Calm and Rape Me." The slogans were the product of an auto-generator, but somehow passed unnoticed by human detection until Amazon shoppers saw it and complained:

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Prachi Gupta

Prachi Gupta is an Assistant News Editor for Salon, focusing on pop culture. Follow her on Twitter at @prachigu or email her at pgupta@salon.com.